## Abstract Patients with esophageal squamous cell carcinoma (ESCC) frequently develop other primary cancers, such as gastric cancer and head and neck cancer. Details of carcinogenesis in patients with multiple primaries that include esophageal carcinoma with other primary carcinoma (ECOPC) remain
Microsatellite instability in japanese esophageal carcinoma
β Scribed by Hideaki Nakashima; Masaki Mori; Koshi Mimori; Hiroshi Inoue; Kenji Shibuta; Kinva Baba; Ken-Ichi Mafune; Tsuyoshi Akiyoshi
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1995
- Tongue
- French
- Weight
- 509 KB
- Volume
- 64
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0020-7136
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β¦ Synopsis
Recent studies have shown that microsatellite instability (MSI) may play an important role in the development of various types of cancer. However, there have been only 2 reports describing MS1 in esophageal carcinoma and the clinicopathologic significance of MSI in this malignancy has not yet been clarified. To better elucidate the role of genetic instability in the development of esophageal carcinoma, we investigated the presence of MSI in 32 cases of esophageal cancer using paired samples of fresh frozen tumor and normal tissue by a method based on the polymerase chain reaction. MSI was defined as occurring in tumors which showed altered banding patterns at one or more microsatellite loci. The incidence of MSI in esophageal carcinoma was 6 out of 32 patients. MSI was observed more frequently in cases with small-cell carcinoma (2 out of 2) than in cases with squamous-cell carcinoma (4 out of 29). No cases with adenocarcinoma or Barrett's metaplasia were included in our series. No significant correlations between MSI and other clinicopathologic parameters were observed. The present study suggests that (I) some Japanese esophageal carcinomas certainly correlate with DNA replication error, and
(2) MSI may be more frequent in small-cell carcinoma of the esophagus than in squamous-cell carcinoma of the esophagus.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Microsatellite instability (MSI) has been reported to occur in a wide variety of sporadic tumours, such as colorectal and gastric cancers. MSI positivity has been associated with a particular clinico-pathologic profile, including the presence of abundant lymphoid infiltration, poor differentiation a
Microsatellite instability has been found preferentially in tumours associated with the hereditary non-polyposiscolorectal-cancer (HNPCC) syndrome. This phenotype, manifested as new alleles at microsatellite loci, and often the result of a defective mismatch-repair gene, is seen as allelic mobility